Cruas Nuclear Power Plant | |
Name Official: | Centrale Nucléaire de Cruas |
Coordinates: | 44.6331°N 4.7567°W |
Country: | France |
Location: | Cruas and Meysse, Ardèche |
Status: | O |
Construction Began: | 1978 |
Operator: | EDF |
Ps Units Operational: | 4 x 956 MW |
Np Reactor Type: | PWR |
Np Reactor Supplier: | Framatome |
Ps Units Manu Model: | Alstom |
Ps Electrical Capacity: | 3824 |
Ps Annual Generation: | 23,241 |
Ps Electrical Cap Fac: | 69.4% |
The Cruas Nuclear Power Station is a nuclear power plant located in Cruas and Meysse communes, Ardèche next to the Rhône River in France. The site is 35 km north of Tricastin Nuclear Power Center and near the town of Montélimar.
The site contains 4 pressurized water reactors of 900 MW each, totaling 3600 MW total. The construction began in 1978, the reactors were built between 1983 and 1984.
The power station accounts for 4 to 5% of the electric energy production in France, and 40% of the annual usage by the Rhone-Alps area. The site employs about 1,200 workers and has an area of 148 hectares. Cooling water comes from the Rhône river.
On 1 December 2009 reactor 4 was shut down after vegetation blocked the intake of the cooling system. The nuclear safety authority Autorité de sûreté nucléaire (ASN) classified the incident as level 2 on the International Nuclear Event Scale.[1] [2] [3]
On 5 December 2011, two anti-nuclear campaigners breached the perimeter of the Cruas Plant, escaping detection for more than 14 hours, while posting videos of their sit-in on the internet.[4]
A 4.8M earthquake in the Ardeche region on 11 November 2019 meant that Électricité de France was required to halt production and check equipment at the plant. This period offline will mean that EDF will not meet its annual power production projection.[5]
In 1991 it was decided by the owners of the plant to carry out a Mural project on the cooling towers focusing on the topic of ecology. Author of the mural on the Tignes Dam, Jean-Marie Pierret was selected to design the painting, 9 mountaineers helped to actually paint the structure. The painting reflects the basics of Water and Air and is titled Aquarius, and was inaugurated in December 1991. It took 8,000 working hours and of paint to complete the project.